Research and QI
Faculty in the Division of Hospital Medicine work through multiple Quality Improvement methods to improve the science of inpatient medicine, the systems and processes by which we provide that care, and increase quality and cost-effectiveness of that care.
Previous and current projects led by division faculty have had aims such as the following:
- Improving efficiency by applying the Lean methodology and “one-piece flow” to the hospital admission and discharge processes
- Evaluating outcomes of patients discharged from the Emergency Department after referral to Hospital Medicine for admission
- Standardizing the care for patients with alcohol withdrawal and providing medications for the maintenance of sobriety on discharge
- Using of individual patient care plans (ICPs) to improve outcomes and utilization for patients with frequent inpatient hospitalizations
- Decreasing unnecessary use of telemetry monitoring and short-term blood pressure treatment
- Reducing care variation in the evaluations of patients with low-risk chest pain and syncope
Standardized, Interdepartmental, Simulation-Based Central Line Insertion Course Closes an Educational Gap and Improves Intern Comfort with the Procedure
Grudziak J, Herndon B, Dancel RD, Arora H, Tignanelli CJ, Phillips MR, Crowner JR, True NA, Kiser AC, Brown RF, Goodell HP, Murty N, Meyers MO, Montgomery SP
Acute Pain Management in Hospitalized Children
Dancel R, Liles EA, Fiore D
Oyster-related tenosynovitis: a rare case of Mycobacterium szulgai in the immunocompromised
Baca-Atlas MH, Barzin AH
House staff–led interdisciplinary morbidity and mortality conference promotes systematic improvement
Tignanelli CJ, Embree GGR, Barzin AH
A 16-Year-Old Girl With Altered Mental Status, Abducens Nerve Palsy, and Ataxia
Dover K, Stephens JR
An Uncommon Presentation of the Common Cold: Pyelonephritis in an Immunocompromised Patient
Ciccone E, Stephens JR
Characteristics and Outcomes of Patients Discharged from the Emergency Department after Referral for Hospitalist Admission
Caulfield CA
Constipation-Related Healthcare Utilization Before and After Hospitalization for Constipation
Stephens JR, Steiner MJ, DeJong N, Rodean J, Hall M, Richardson T, Berry J
Creation and growth of a hospitalist-led medicine procedure service: A 2 year experience
Dancel RD, Lamba J, Caulfield CA, Liles EA
Identifying Froin’s Syndrome as a sign of spinal cord neoplasm
Shaban MS, Dancel RD
Mesenteric Thrombosis Complicating Influenza B Infection
Collins M, McGinn MK, Weber D
Milking the Diagnosis
Dover KL, Stephens JR